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Benyamin Cohen
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    Seth Greenland

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 The Queer Orthodox Jew

The Queer Orthodox Jew

 
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There is a certain element of schizophrenia to it--biblical verses run through my head even during the sexual encounter--‘I know this is wrong, I'm sorry G-d'-but at a certain point those voices are silenced by the sheer physical pleasure of it.

 

Single Woman

We tend to think of "queer" as referring to homosexual orientation.  But within the Orthodox Jewish community, the term queer can take on a more subtle meaning.  As an Orthodox individual, any step I take outside of the mandates of halakhah, or Jewish law--whether in the sexual realm or any other realm--makes me queer.

Let me explain:  In general society, which is heteronormative, "queer" is juxtaposed with "straight" in thinking about sexual identity. However, in the Orthodox Jewish community, halakhah defines the norm, or the "straight", and the acts marginalized by halakhah leave a large space open for the queer, including heterosexual individuals.


Most Orthodox communities interpret halakhah as proscribing all forms of sexual activity outside of marriage, from homosexual activity to heterosexual activity to autoerotic activity and even in many cases to sexual thoughts. That leaves a large queer space for almost anyone who is unmarried in the Orthodox community. And though the character of the people and of the sexual acts that are marginalized may be different in the Orthodox community than in society at large, and though the number of people who inhabit this space may be larger, queer space is queer space--with all the un-pleasantries which accompany it, irrespective of which norm creates it.

A second factor in creating Orthodox queer space is what Alan Unterman writes about as the "nebich factor" which takes its place alongside halakhah in defining the queer:

Rarely is there a point when someone who is not married is simply accepted as someone who does not wish to marry.  For traditional Judaism, all unmarried members of the community are nebich, not yet married.  All childless couples are nebich, not yet parents.  All parents are, ‘Please God by you', grandfathers and grandmothers in the making.[1]

One factor which contributes to the pain of Modern Orthodox singles is their position within the broader Orthodox community. Rarely are singles simply accepted without any caveats, or without the "nebich" factor. This social expectation, compounded by the halakhic norm, also contributes to the "queer space" which singles are forced to inhabit. While in general society compulsory heterosexuality is the norm and homosexuality is its other, in the Orthodox Jewish community, strict adherence to the code of Jewish law--which includes the mandate to marry and procreate--is the norm and any deviance from halakhah places the individual in queer space.

The "nebich" factor combined with the halakhic issues at play have negative repercussions on Orthodox singles, affecting both their self-perception and consequent ability to form meaningful relationships with others.  Being forced into queer space creates a culture of silence, secrecy, and shame. It is a mindset that is hard to break out of, even when one marries and "graduates" to hetero-normative society...

But let's think broader than just Orthodox singles.  Every community and sub-community has its own set of norms (be they overt or covert) and those norms will always create different subsets within the group. In each and every group there is a norm and there is its other, which I call the queer. And in each group the queer gets marginalized and placed into a similar space of enforced silence, secrecy and shame.  The modes of living and breathing shame and secrecy are--to put it mildly--psychologically and existentially detrimental to all those who find themselves relegated to queer space by their communities.

Despite the many negative ramifications of forcing individuals into queer space, I don't want to focus or elaborate on those negative ramifications right now.  As the new year begins on the Jewish calendar I am challenged to find something positive to write about queer space and how individuals can mobilize their being placed in queer space to their own advantage and to the advantage of the larger Jewish community this year.  Judith Plaskow, feminist Jewish theologian, writes about the additional insight that the queer individual has over the "normal" individual, calling it the "epistemological privilege of the oppressed."

Plaskow writes that "those who have been marginalized or oppressed by a society or religious tradition often are able to perceive inadequacies in that society or tradition that are invisible, or much more difficult to see, to those who look from the dominant perspective."[2] By virtue of being placed outside of the norm and being forced to inhabit queer space, the queer individual is able to see things that those inside the system cannot see-those who are marginalized are uniquely situated to be able to launch a critique, in a way that those who are in the norm or mainstream cannot perceive.  Being oppressed gives the queer individual an awareness which others lack.

The beginning of the year is both a natural and a mandated time for taking a cheshbon ha-nefesh, or soul-searching, on both the individual and communal levels.  As individuals, if we feel that we have been forced into queer space, or put into the position of the "other" within our communities, let's take some time to put the anger and bitterness aside, and use the unique perspective which our position has granted us in a constructive way.  Let us use this insight of the epistemological privilege of the oppressed to both personal and communal advantage.  Instead of lashing out in unstructured anger against the community, launch a critique of the norm from your perspective-as Plaskow so cogently argues, by virtue of being queer you can perceive things which those in the mainstream are genuinely unable to perceive, even were they to try to do so.

And to those who inhabit the mainstream or dominant perspective, take this season to get beyond the binaries and categories which keep society bifurcated.  Try to open your ears and your heart to the critique being launched and then to think about how you can respond to it effectively.  Real societal change needs to begin on the level of individuals, and if each mainstream, card-carrying person in society took a moment to listen to their queer neighbor and try to respond to their critique on a human level, society would move to a different place.

 

However, in reality I'm being a little artificial in my distinctions, since the line between the norm and the other is a thin line, and each and every person I know stands on the tightrope itself, in some situations personifying the mainstream, and in other situations being queer.  That being the case, let us tap into to the spiritual energy of the new year, of Rosh Hashanah, to help us open our hearts both to the queerness and normalness inside each of us, and take a moment to both launch a critique from our own queer space, while simultaneously listening to the critique that others are able to offer us.  Let us speak out and let us really listen to each other-and then as a community, let us be open to change and to improvement.

 



[1]   Alan Unterman, "Judaism and Homosexuality: Some Orthodox Perspectives," in Jewish Explorations of Sexuality, Ed. Jonathan Magonet ( Providence: Berghahn, 1995), p.  68.

[2]  Judith Plaskow, "Decentering Sex: Rethinking Jewish Sexual Ethics," in God Forbid:  Religion and Sex in American Public Life, Ed. Kathleen Sands (New York:  Oxford UP, 2000), p. 27.

All images by Oreet Ashery from the series Say Cheese


 
zbird

zbird


You write:

"In each and every group there is a norm and there is
its other, which I call the queer. And in each group the queer gets
marginalized and placed into a similar space of enforced silence, secrecy and
shame."

So is there no legitimate norm that a community can impose on its members?  Can no behavior or character flaw ever be "marginalized"?  I see the error in marginalizing homosexuals because I don't see any moral problem with homosexuality.  On the other hand, I would hate to belong to a community that rejected the norm against stealing, murder, child molestation, etc.  Thieves, murders and child molesters are marginalized (hopefully encarcerated) for good reason.

--Z





Maayan

Maayan


Interesting topic you have presented Jennie, I enjoyed reading through your thought process. I wonder if you have pushed the term queer too far, to encompass too much. The idea of being queer if you are not in the norm confuses me. I think your distinction would make everyone partially queer, because most people have either done something not "normal" or the thought has crossed their mind. I do agree that in the religious context there is a more obvious distinction-whether you follow all the halackic rules or not, sorts one into the category of norm and this so called queer. However in the secular world I don't there there is a definition of what is to be considered "normal," I think this concept has become so vague and biased in modern society.



mahal

mahal


Having returned to Israel after 24 years there are tremendous changes that have taken place.  What is most noticable is the numbers of Jews enlisting as soldiers in the demographic war.  There were always matchmakers who made a good living in Jerusalem working within the Ultra Orthodox community, but now these 'professional' schiduchim are ten a penny and they are enlisting new recruits of ready parents each day, except for Shabbat and Hagim.

I have heard of young girls going to Yeshivah before finishing High School being told to forget their unneccesary secular education and to begin searching for a Chatan in order to start a family.  These girls sometimes as young as 16 are married by 17.  Apparently a groom for a young girl is quite easy to find. 

The demographic struggle has some surprising positivity for unusual coupling.  Israel is a country that not only provides free artificial insemination, but has a service to find fathers within the gay community to support mothers of babies born through AID (Artificial Insemination by Donor).  

But there are the "horror" scenes for those of us used to polite society.  I remember my first sightings in a mall of women of a certain age (my age I would think) walking about in public with a bellies full of baby.  It was shocking at first. One woman walked up to me and stared in my eye confrontationally.  I could read her mind, "Get over it", her eyes said to me, "this is the right way".  And I wondered if she had known I was divorced, would she have sent me to a shadchanit in order to enlist my services to the last egg in this all encompassing demograhic struggle.

 I wonder what we are coming to.  I think of hearing Rebbitzin Lori Palatnik's talk about a friend who visited the Holocaust Museum in Washington DC.  The friend, a woman, was miraculously fortunate to obtain the last ticket of the day to the Holocaust Museum on the spur of the moment.  As the friend entered the museum she was given a name (as everyone is) of a Holocaust victim whose life story will be revealed at the end of the museum tour.  This woman was given the name of someone who shared her first and last names.  Another miracle.  When Lori's friend returned from the tour she related the story to the rebbitzin of her obtaining the last ticket without a booking, and of the name given to her being her own.  At dinner she asked Rebbitzin Palatnik what she thought these miracles of coincidence meant.  The Rebbbitzin's response was,"This means you should marry and have many children".  I personally never would have thought of that response.  I never would have considered it a forgone conclusion, certainly.

So after 24 years in the galut I don't think it is funny to say that one is considered queer in the orthodox community if one is single.  It isn't funny either that one is considered queer if one is single in Israel in general.  And least humourous is the development that one is considered queer in Israel if one not a parent to be (even at a certain age).  Oh, my.





tellner

tellner


So risking Down's Syndrome is normative. Urninary incontinence at 40 is Jewish. Having so many kids that you can only survive on charity, foreign aid and by parasitizing Jews who limit their families to the number of children they can afford is "the right way".

For this I raised money for Israel? That is what my tax dollars go to pay for?





mahal

mahal


tellner

There may be three factors that boost the Israeli economy, perhaps the only Second World economy on the planet, from approaching Third World growth (off course taking into account US tax dollars).  These contribute greatly to the coffers: 

1.  Rich French Jews who buy Israeli properties at a tremendous rate and who visit 2-3 times a year for holidays where they spend their francs and don't use services.

2.  The new Russian Christian elite who holiday in Egypt and travel to Israel for unbelievable shopping sprees.

3.  Anglo Jews who make aliyah and then make yoridah shortly after, selling off their goods at discounts before they make their way back 'home'.

But we do digress.  Maybe we should laugh with queer, single orthodox Jewry.

eilat